Media training 101 for small businesses

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Great news: you just scored a big press interview to promote your business. The story will expose your brand to the perfect new audience and drive meaningful traffic to your website. So…don't blow it. Yes, just as quickly as the excitement for the opportunity arrived, the realization that you now have to do an interview sets in. I get it—press interviews can absolutely be intimidating. The resulting coverage represents a significant opportunity to acquire new customers, drive sales, or raise awareness, and you want to be sure to represent your brand well and really compel the audience to check out your company. On top of that, you have to contend with adrenaline and nerves in the moment. You may be thinking, "So many other business owners are so polished and articulate in their interviews. How am I going to pull that off?" Deep breath. A successful interview is usually the result of good media training: preparation and practice in advance of an interview. I've tr

4 workflows to better manage your brand's social media

One of the most famous adages in marketing is "Go where your audience is." But social media marketers know this is easier said than done. Nowadays, your audience is strewn across many different social media networks. There's Facebook on the mature end, TikTok on the new end, and an endless eruption of new networks—most of which won't last.

This evolving swarm of networks can be stressful to manage. If you really try to be everywhere your audience is, you can end up moving in a thousand directions at once. Social media management can quickly consume your entire day, taking you away from core tasks and giving you little in return.

With automation, you can make social media management easier and more productive. Share posts between social networks automatically, update your followers when you post new content, easily track your social media performance, and monitor networks for any mentions of your business.

Automatically share content across social networks

One of the ways social media can consume your time is if you treat all networks the same and manually craft posts for each one. In the days of automation, this just isn't necessary.

Rather than spread yourself thin, research where your audience spends the most time. Optimize your post for that social network, concentrate your efforts there, and then let automation extend your content to other networks.

If you start from Twitter, you can use Zapier to update your audience across networks like Facebook or LinkedIn without any extra effort from you.

Here's how that looks when you automatically send a post from Twitter to LinkedIn.

A post on Twitter
A post on LinkedIn

Depending on the demographics of your audience, maybe Facebook is a better starting point. Optimizing content for your Facebook page gives you many more characters than Twitter and allows you to reach an audience that might appreciate that depth.

If your audience skews younger, or if your product looks good in a photograph, Instagram might be a better platform to focus on.

Keep your followers updated

Social media companies are powerful. They always have the right and the ability to decrease organic distribution, raise prices, or dictate new rules.

That's why many brands have returned to maintaining a strong presence on their blogs. That doesn't mean, however, that you should abandon social media. No single social network should be your sole method of distribution, but they can still deliver important traffic. The key is to use automation so you can focus on content and let automation take care of social distribution.

Your followers will want to know when you blog, but they might be splintered across a variety of networks. Promote your new posts on all of your branded channels automatically.

Depending on the complexity of your social media presence, this splintering problem can even happen within the same network. Many brands run several Twitter accounts and Facebook pages. Rather than sign in and out to post the same content, use these automated workflows to sync content across your pages and accounts.

Track your social media performance

Social media moves fast. Facebook posts last about six hours before the rest of a user's Facebook feed swallows it, Instagram posts last 48 hours, and Tweets last as little as 18 minutes.

The advantage of this speed is that you have plenty of space to experiment. If a Tweet is gone in under 20 minutes, you can experiment numerous times throughout the day to see what kind of content your audience likes.

The disadvantage is that all of this takes up precious time—if you're not using automation. With these workflows, you can filter the signal from the noise and easily see how well your social media management is doing. Integrate your social media output with tracking and collaboration tools so your entire team can work on developing your social media presence.

Monitor mentions of your business and other key topics

Social media automation isn't all output. The best brands don't treat social media as a stage—they listen just as much as they talk.

With automation, you can easily turn your social media tools into customer engagement hubs. These channels can become tools for responding to support requests, encouraging brand advocacy, and learning more about your customers' day-to-day lives.

These automated workflows instantly let you know whenever someone mentions your brand so you can react accordingly.

Your customers are sharing a lot of useful information, even if they don't reply directly to your handle. Social media offers you the opportunity to listen in on your customers' authentic conversations and learn about what kinds of content they like, share, and trust.

With automated workflows, keeping track of key influencers or customers doesn't have to be an impossibly manual process. These integrations make it easy to get the information you need without actually being on social media all day.

A Zapier Slackbot shares posts from a Reddit subreddit

Make the most of social media automation

Social media is difficult to manage. Your customers are posting a lot of content and sharing even more—and most of that information is irrelevant to your brand. Participating in the discourse without automation is hard, and doing it effectively requires a substantial up-front investment of effort that might not pay off.

Don't do it on your own—even if you're a team of one. With automation, you can keep your brand consistent across networks, ensure different segments of followers can keep up with you, and do it all while staying organized.



from The Zapier Blog https://ift.tt/31PHr7z

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